Native Californian TrailsNew Almaden Mine
The Ohlone traveled here via Los Alamitos Creek to gather cinnabar, which was traded throughout the state for use as a pigment. Native Californians would travel great distances to trade for it. Controlled by the Quiroste tribelet, the Almaden mine was the principal source of this mineral. To mine the cinnabar, a 100-foot-long tunnel was constructed underground, large enough for one man to comfortably work inside. Rounded streambed cobbles functioned as hammers, picks, and mauls. Skeletons and stone implements found near the working face of the tunnel indicate that there once was an untimely cave-in. Unlike specialized Pomo chert drill makers or Gabrieleqo soapstone pot designers, no specialized miners class developed among the Quiroste working here. Instead, the cinnabar mines were probably worked over a long period of time by many different people. Just as the Pomo salt wars resulted from the Potter Valley Pomo's failure to offer the Stonyford Pomo gifts before taking salt, battles occurred here when the Yokuts, attempted to gather cinnabar without first acknowledging the resident Quiroste. During historic times, Almaden developed into the richest quicksilver (mercury) mines in California, with shafts extending 2,300 feet below the ground. The mines closed in 1972 in response to the discovery of mercury's toxicity.
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The details, dates, and prices mentioned in this article were accurate at the time of publication.
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